Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.

Seaweed species-richness in the arctic and temperate North Atlantic Ocean (north of 39º N) is reviewed. Comparisons with other oceanic areas show, for example, the Indian Ocean to be richer in species but the northern North Atlantic Ocean to have a greater diversity of brown algal genera. Comparison...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tittley, Ian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Universidade dos Açores 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/163
id ftunivacores:oai:repositorio.uac.pt:10400.3/163
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivacores:oai:repositorio.uac.pt:10400.3/163 2023-05-15T15:02:26+02:00 Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean. Tittley, Ian 2002 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/163 eng eng Universidade dos Açores Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas = Life and Marine Sciences; "ARQUIPÉLAGO. Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas". ISSN 0873-4704. Nº 19A (2002): 13-25 0873-4704 http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/163 openAccess Algas Marinhas Seaweed Açores Azores article 2002 ftunivacores 2022-05-01T14:29:56Z Seaweed species-richness in the arctic and temperate North Atlantic Ocean (north of 39º N) is reviewed. Comparisons with other oceanic areas show, for example, the Indian Ocean to be richer in species but the northern North Atlantic Ocean to have a greater diversity of brown algal genera. Comparisons between North Atlantic regional floras show the north-east Atlantic to be richer in species than the north-west, and a gradient of species richness to occur from south to north along both coasts. The area comprising Ireland, southern England, Atlantic France and Spain may be considered a “hot-spot” of species richness. The mid-Atlantic Azores archipelago has been recently shown to be richer in species than sites on the American coast and in northern Europe. The conservation of seaweed biodiversity is briefly considered. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic North Atlantic North East Atlantic Repositório da Universidade dos Açores Arctic Indian
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório da Universidade dos Açores
op_collection_id ftunivacores
language English
topic Algas Marinhas
Seaweed
Açores
Azores
spellingShingle Algas Marinhas
Seaweed
Açores
Azores
Tittley, Ian
Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
topic_facet Algas Marinhas
Seaweed
Açores
Azores
description Seaweed species-richness in the arctic and temperate North Atlantic Ocean (north of 39º N) is reviewed. Comparisons with other oceanic areas show, for example, the Indian Ocean to be richer in species but the northern North Atlantic Ocean to have a greater diversity of brown algal genera. Comparisons between North Atlantic regional floras show the north-east Atlantic to be richer in species than the north-west, and a gradient of species richness to occur from south to north along both coasts. The area comprising Ireland, southern England, Atlantic France and Spain may be considered a “hot-spot” of species richness. The mid-Atlantic Azores archipelago has been recently shown to be richer in species than sites on the American coast and in northern Europe. The conservation of seaweed biodiversity is briefly considered.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tittley, Ian
author_facet Tittley, Ian
author_sort Tittley, Ian
title Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
title_short Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
title_full Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
title_fullStr Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
title_full_unstemmed Seaweed diversity in the North Atlantic Ocean.
title_sort seaweed diversity in the north atlantic ocean.
publisher Universidade dos Açores
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/163
geographic Arctic
Indian
geographic_facet Arctic
Indian
genre Arctic
North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
genre_facet Arctic
North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
op_relation Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas = Life and Marine Sciences;
"ARQUIPÉLAGO. Ciências Biológicas e Marinhas". ISSN 0873-4704. Nº 19A (2002): 13-25
0873-4704
http://hdl.handle.net/10400.3/163
op_rights openAccess
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